Indra Øverland

Indra Overland (spelled Øverland in Norwegian) is a specialist on energy politics. He did his PhD at the Scott Polar Research Institute of the University of Cambridge, UK, and has later published on a broad range of energy politics issues. The PhD was awarded the Toby Jackman Prize.

Indra Øverland
Born1973
NationalityNorwegian
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge
Scientific career
FieldsEnergy Politics
InstitutionsNUPI

Currently he is Acting Head of the Department of Russian and Eurasian Studies at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI) and Assistant Professor at the University of Tromsø in northern Norway.

Some of his main works include Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan (Routledge, 2010), Russian Renewable Energy: The Potential for International Cooperation (Ashgate, 2009), The Caspian Sea Region towards 2025 (Eburon, 2010).

He is best known for his contribution of the concept 'slippery slopes' to the theorisation of the resource curse. 'Slippery slopes' refers to the difficult decision that authoritarian and semi-authoritarian rulers make between crackling down on opposition or allowing it to simmer, and the potential role of natural resource rents in making this decision.

Overland has appeared regularly as a commentator in the main Norwegian media, as well as in international media. He has been cited by among others Newsweek, Associate Press and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Dagbladet, Verdens Gang, Dagsrevyen, Urix, Dagsnytt 18, Her og nå, Klassekampen, TV2 Alltid nyheter.

See also

References

    Convergence between China and Russia in the China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly

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